the 5 women you must date

Upload: nestor-lopez

Post on 04-Apr-2018

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 7/29/2019 The 5 Women You Must Date

    1/4

    The 5 Women You Must Date

    by Matt Schneiderman, for Match.com'sHappen magazine

    As a single guy in New York, I meet all kinds of different women; on any given

    weekend, I might meet a serious financier, a flighty stewardess, an intellectual gradstudent, a bohemian textile designer, whatever -- and I have! Some of my relationships

    with these women have lasted several years, others just a few weeks. And though I'm

    constantly refining what sort of woman I'm searching for, some of my best datingexperiences were with those who, I would have sworn, weren't my type. I had fun, sure,

    but more importantly I gained important insight into myself and my love life. Here are

    some of the surprising types of women I've dated, and why I'm glad I did.

    1. The daddy's girl

    Think daddy's little princess is the last kind of woman you need to date? Well, listen tothis: Maria, a 25-year-old grad student I met online, shocked me on our first date by

    divulging that she lived with her parents. What's more, she worked at her father's law

    office. It quickly became obvious that she was very close to her father, a man who paid

    for her food, clothes, taxis -- everything. After a few weeks of seeing each other, Mariatook me home to meet her folks. As I'd anticipated, her dad was Robert De Niro gruff

    upon receiving me, but warmed up when I presented his wife with a bouquet of lilies and

    a bottle of wine. While Maria helped prepare dinner, I chatted with her dad, trying mybest to impress him. Maria and I left that night emboldened by my seeming success in

    wowing her father, who invited me back "anytime I wanted." My relationship with Maria

    progressed, and I spent more time with her -- and her family. Soon I was enjoyingweekends at their beach house and home-cooked meals. More significantly, I came to see

    Maria's dad as a surrogate for my own father and looked to him for career and life advice.

    When Maria and I broke up, I considered how disappointed he would be with me for

    failing to take care of his little girl. Still, I knew she had him to go to for support post-breakup.

    powered by What I learned: Dating a woman who is close with her father means you are

    going to become close with her father. I was proud to win over Maria's dad and beentrusted with his "little girl." But post-breakup I realized that I had been overeager to be

    a part of a family and not eager enough about being in a relationship with Maria. Maria,

    on the other hand, was more into her father's approval than she was into me. Ultimately, Ilearned that I should want to be a good boyfriend and not a good son -- at least not to

    anyone but my parents.

    2. The struggling artist

    I couldn't help but flirt with Nadia, the beautiful waitress at the upscale bar where I wasdrinking with friends one night, and ask her for her number. On our first date, Nadia

    mentioned that she worked as a cocktail waitress to pay rent, but that her real passion washer art. She was a trained painter and sculptor and worked primarily with glass. Being

    with an artist -- someone who devoted all of her available time and energy towards

    creating works of art -- humbled and inspired me. As a writer, I've always felt I could domore to "create," perhaps craft a thoughtful short story or, even, a novel; perhaps I was

    Gertrude Stein to her Pablo Picasso -- but straight and dating each other. My horizons

    http://www.happenmag.com/magazine/index.aspx?lid=1&trackingid=525516&bannerid=651075http://www.happenmag.com/magazine/index.aspx?lid=1&trackingid=525516&bannerid=651075http://www.happenmag.com/magazine/index.aspx?lid=1&trackingid=525516&bannerid=651075
  • 7/29/2019 The 5 Women You Must Date

    2/4

    expanded, too, as I took Nadia on cultural dates, splurging on museum admissions and

    concert tickets. She never offered to chip in -- but I was fine with that, equating

    "struggling artist" with "starving artist." Plus paying made me a gentlemanly patron ofthe arts! I didn't really "get" her stuff (half-glass, half-animal-gut structures, mostly), but

    by the time she showed it to me, I was too into her to be much of a critic. Unfortunately,

    Nadia was far more into her work than she was into me, and she'd spend what little timeshe had away from the bar at her studio space. I felt lucky if we hung out more than a few

    hours each week.

    What I learned: Passion is sexy, and few women are as passionate as working artists.

    And though this passion wasn't always extended to me -- I did all the pursuing, calling

    and planning -- she was wholly engaged when we were together (and that included the

    most intense sex I'd had in years). Seeing the artistic glint in her eye was more than aturn-on -- it was an inspiration. But being someone's second priority (or lower), even if

    her first priority is art, wasn't what I wanted -- I wanted Nadia's passion focused on me.

    And I learned that with a dedicated artist, that attention just isn't in the offering.

    3. The older woman

    "You and Michelle will totally hit off," my matchmaker friend Katie told me. "Oh, andshe's a few years older than you," she added, figuring it wouldn't matter to me. I didn't

    think it would, but I was still taken aback when I met Michelle. At 40, Michelle was 12

    years my senior -- and what a difference those years made! I have nieces; she had a four-year-old. I rent an apartment and have roommates; she owned her place. My longest

    relationship lasted three years; her marriage lasted... OK, so at least in that regard we

    were similar. But within minutes of our hanging out, Michelle had shattered all my

    assumptions about single moms being exhausted and stressed out. Instead, Michelle wasfunny, insightful, and successful. Michelle had founded a national magazine I was

    familiar with. What 28-year-old could claim such an accomplishment? On our dates, we

    talked about travel, our work, friends we had in common, and all the other stuff twopeople talk about when they're getting to know each other. Naturally, she spoke about her

    daughter a fair amount, but not in such a way that I felt like she had no social life. On the

    contrary, we met up for movies, dinners, drinks, late-night improv comedy shows --anything so long as she had a heads-up in time to find a sitter.

    powered by What I learned: Prior to dating Michelle, I gravitated towards girls my ageor younger, like most guys. But being with Michelle made me realize an older woman

    has several advantages over her younger competition -- that she's confident enough to

    realize that other women aren't competition, for one. Michelle had done a lot in the years

    between her mid-20s and 30s, and she oozed sophistication and confidence. Being withher earned us looks, but I hardly noticed them, so entranced was I with every bit of

    wisdom and insight she imparted to me. And the few years she had on me didn't make hera laggard in the fun department. Though our chemistry failed to boil over into something

    more serious than casual dating, we still hang out, and she still impresses me with her

    vitality and independence -- qualities I would want from anyone I date.

    4. The wallflower

  • 7/29/2019 The 5 Women You Must Date

    3/4

    Opposites attract, right? Such was my thinking as I dated one social gadfly after another,

    hoping their life-of-the-party ways would rub off on me and I'd become more fun by

    association. Until I met Elizabeth, that is. Like me, Elizabeth was serious, an avid reader-- and painfully shy at parties. It should come as no surprise that we met online,

    homebodies now enabled to find each other thanks to the Internet. We both preferred

    spending Friday and Saturday nights at a quiet bar with Guinness and conversation or atmy apartment playing gin rummy -- rather than hitting up as many happening spots in the

    city as we could find. We did occasionally end up at parties or other shindigs, where I

    would be content to bring her drinks before we'd again retreat to a corner to chat amongourselves.

    What I learned: Especially early on in relationships, I tend to cater to my dates' "fun"

    sides, whisking them from pre-party to special event to concert to party to after-party, allin the hopes of seeming spontaneous, exciting, and in-the-know. Elizabeth's social

    awkwardness was something of a relief, since I didn't need to prove how well I could

    work a room to impress her. And she had little interest in going out, much less in

    partying, so I became better able to skip exhausting long-nights-out and instead learned toappreciate quiet nights in -- with someone who liked to play cards! We broke up shortly

    after I met Nadia (see "The Struggling Artist," above), so perhaps I need someone a bitmore exciting, but I did learn that dating needn't be all about going out and getting crazy.

    There are quieter pleasures to be had, too.

    5. The girl who's smarter

    I pride myself on my word knowledge. I am also a very sore loser. How, then, could I

    control myself every time Laura beat me at Scrabble, playing nine-letter words like

    IDEATIONS (a fancy term for "thought" -- I had to look it up)? Laura and I both went tothe same small liberal-arts school and both majored in English Literature, but while I've

    spent the years since college flipping through magazines I hoped to write for and TiVo-

    ing cartoons, Laura continued to study, earning her master's degree before moving toNew York to begin work on her Ph.D. Dates were far more diverse than what I'd grown

    accustomed to: Rather than talk about the NFL or see a movie, we discussed narrative

    framing in Faulkner or the difficulties inherent in a representative democracy, orsomething we'd both read in that week's Science section of The New York Times. But I

    always felt like she was holding back, afraid of referencing a work of romantic poetry

    (her subject of study) for fear it would go over my head -- which was the likely result.

    What I learned: Having conditioned myself to not seem too smart on first, second, or

    third dates, I was likely projecting my own embarrassment about being smart onto Laura

    -- when, in fact, she had no such qualms about her intelligence or about being morescholarly than I am. I loved that she understood what I said when I was making sense --

    and would even try to keep up with me when I didn't. And though I didn't start reading

    Milton, I still appreciated that she could talk about his writing intelligently and in such away that even I could understand her. (She's on her way to becoming a professor.)

    Though we've reverted to being "just friends," I still hang out with her for the stimulating

    conversation -- the evidence of mental gymnastics I now come to expect even (or

    especially) on a first date, both from the woman I'm with and from myself.

  • 7/29/2019 The 5 Women You Must Date

    4/4

    So, while none of these types turned out to be my type, I am grateful for having dated

    each of them -- and for the lessons they've taught me as I look for The One.